Rep. Steve Holland, D-Plantersville, holds aloft a hand printed sign that says "NRA A or F" as he argues against proposed enhanced gun legislation at the Capitol in Jackson, Miss., Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018. House Bill 1083 is a measure that creates a process to challenge bans of carrying guns almost anywhere on government property, if the gun owner had a certain type of gun license. Holland also argued that some lawmakers were supportive of the proposed law so as to receive an A grade from the National Rifle Association. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

House Judiciary B Committee chairman Andy Gipson, R-Braxton, holds a printout of a previous vote for enhanced gun legislation at the Capitol in Jackson, Miss., Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018. Gipson argued that recent critics of House Bill 1083, a measure that creates a process to challenge bans of carrying guns almost anywhere on government property, if the gun owner had a certain type of gun license, had previously supported enhanced gun carry legislation. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

Rep. John Hines Sr., D-Greenville, questions House Judiciary B Committee chairman Andy Gipson, R-Braxton, unseen, about a proposed enhanced gun legislation at the Capitol in Jackson, Miss., Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018. House Bill 1083 is a measure that creates a process to challenge bans of carrying guns almost anywhere on government property, if the gun owner had a certain type of gun license. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

Rep. Adrienne Wooten, D-Jackson, argues against a proposed enhanced gun legislation at the Capitol in Jackson, Miss., Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018. House Bill 1083 is a measure that creates a process to challenge bans of carrying guns almost anywhere on government property, if the gun owner had a certain type of gun license. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

Correction: XGR--Concealed Carry Licenses story

Correction: XGR--Concealed Carry Licenses story

Correction: XGR--Concealed Carry Licenses story

Feb. 08, 2018

https://www.apnews.com/b46b31e62ba0423bb32b3d15eada040a

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JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — In a story Feb. 7 about a bill concerning concealed carry gun licenses, The Associated Press erroneously identified which committee Rep. Andy Gipson leads. It is the House Judiciary B Committee, not the House Judiciary A Committee.

A corrected version of the story is below:

Guns vs. college football in dispute over where guns can go

It's guns versus college football in a dispute over where certain Mississippi residents can carry firearms, and how universities are enforcing a current law

By JEFF AMY

Associated Press

JACKSON, Miss. — It's guns versus college football in a dispute over where certain Mississippi residents can carry firearms.

At issue is House Bill 1083, which would void rules limiting where some people are allowed to carry guns on public property. House Judiciary B Committee Chairman Andy Gipson, the bill's sponsor, says all it does is remove illegal rules that universities, judges and others have erected to bar guns. But universities say guns in stadiums could lead to opponents refusing to play in Mississippi and guns in dormitories could alarm parents.

The bill passed the House 80-29 Wednesday. It was held for the possibility of more debate, and would also have to pass the state Senate.

The root of the dispute is a law passed in 2011 that's supposed to let people carry guns almost anywhere on public property after taking a training course and getting an enhanced concealed carry license. Universities have interpreted the law to say they can define public spaces, and have mostly excluded sports venues, dormitories, classrooms. Judges and counties have also reacted negatively to allowing people to carry guns everywhere except an active courtroom, with many still enforcing blanket bans on guns anywhere in a courthouse.

Gipson, a Braxton Republican, says he's tired of what he sees as defiance of the law. His bill creates a process to challenge bans. The attorney general's office would have to investigate written complaints within 30 days. If the agency didn't stop violating the law, a person could then sue.

"We gave them seven years to fix this," Gipson said. "I understand they don't like the law, but the bottom line is this has been the law for a long time."

But universities are reacting negatively to the bill. Southeastern Conference Commissioner Greg Sankey sent a letter Wednesday saying the conference wants sports venues exempted from the law.

"It is likely that competitors will decline opportunities to play in Oxford and Starkville, game officials will decline assignments, personal safety concerns will be used against Mississippi's universities during the recruiting process and fan attendance will be negatively impacted," Sankey wrote to Mississippi State University President Mark Keenum and University of Mississippi Chancellor Jeffrey Vitter.

"I believe that a majority of the parents of the outstanding young people we are entrusted with educating and nurturing share my concerns about the passage of this bill and with it the introduction of firearms into our classrooms and our residence halls," Keenum said in a statement.

Other states, including Arkansas, Georgia and Texas, have faced similar issues.

Gipson said it's acceptable for schools to require students and employees not to carry guns, but says people with the license should get their rights. He said, for example, that someone should be able to carry a gun when visiting a patient at the University of Mississippi Medical Center. The hospital complex has adopted particularly restrictive rules about where guns are allowed.

"These are the safest people in a state when it comes to concealed carry," Gipson said, arguing that the additional training makes the enhanced permit holders safer than typical concealed carry-permit holders. Governments can ban most people who carry guns from a wide range of places.

Others, though, argued that even trained gun owners pose threats in courthouses or at sporting events.

Gipson has brought out a stream of pro-gun bills. Some Democrats accuse him of political posturing on behalf of the National Rifle Association.

"It's about NRA, A or F, which rating do you want to have?" said Rep. Steve Holland, a Plantersville Democrat. Holland said his mother carries a handgun while serving as a Lee County Justice Court judge.